[MR] [Slightly OP] Blake Gopnik - 'Pride of Place': Dutch Cityscapes of the Golden Age at the National Gallery of Art - washingtonpost.com
David Chessler
chessler at usa.net
Tue Feb 3 22:28:55 PST 2009
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/02/02/AR2009020203455.html
The 'Golden' Compass
Dutch Cityscapes Point to Liveliest of Details
By Blake Gopnik
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, February 3, 2009; C01
In 1667, a Dutch artist called Jan van der Heyden painted a grand
view of Amsterdam's newly built town hall, declared the Eighth Wonder
of the World -- by Dutchmen, at least.
But when you first come across that picture in "Pride of Place: Dutch
Cityscapes of the Golden Age," a fascinating new show at the National
Gallery of Art, you wonder what young van der Heyden had been smoking
when he painted it. (This is Amsterdam, after all.) The hall's great
cupola looks thin and drawn, as though a Monty Python hand of God has
given it a squeeze.
Yet his cupola looks odd only if you stand directly in front of the
picture, as we've been trained to do with modern images: snapshots,
TV screens, newspaper photos, almost any image made with a lens, in fact.
View this distinctly unmodern, pre-photographic picture as it was
meant to be seen, from very close, and from a point more or less
lined up with the eyes of the horse at its far bottom right, and its
cupola seems not just normal, but stunningly real, almost as though
it's sitting high above you in the air.
<<<snip>>>
(Interestingly, when van der Heyden sold his picture south, to a
Medici duke, he included some kind of device you could attach to the
frame to set your eye at the right point of view. It seems that
Italians, like us, needed help with looking at the pictures by their
Dutch contemporaries.)
<<<snip>>>
Even pictures that barely hint at their perspective may ask you to
sidle crab-wise up to them. Look from straight ahead and several feet
away at Aelbert Cuyp's great image of the Maas River at Dordrecht,
from the National Gallery's own holdings, and the wide-beamed ship at
its far right seems almost as round as a barrel. Take the ship in
from much nearer but far over to the left, from about the point of
view of the important officials being rowed to it, and this lead ship
suddenly slims down, projecting out toward you and almost ready to
pass by. The great Maas, instead of looking like a pool in the
painting's foreground, now seems like a long channel that your gaze
runs down as it skims along the ranks of Holland's specially
assembled fleet -- the real naval assembly, from July 1646, that is
the main subject of the painting. Come near, and Cuyp's celebrated
clouds, which he's designed almost receding in perspective to the
left, seem to soar above you, up and out of view. They stop seeming
like a perversely vacant zone across the top of his canvas, as
they're often described.
<<<Snip>>>
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/02/02/AR2009020203255.html
A Vermeer Treasure That's Out of 'Place'
Tuesday, February 3, 2009; C02
The greatest, most famous Dutch cityscape of all is Johannes
Vermeer's big "View of Delft."
Yet it isn't in the National Gallery's show "Pride of Place: Dutch
Cityscapes in the Golden Age."
The picture was supposed to come over from its home in the little
Mauritshuis museum in The Hague, co-organizer of this show. Late in
the game, however, Mauritshuis officials decided that they couldn't
risk another trip abroad for their very greatest treasure. (It
previously came to the National Gallery in 1995.)
Its absence is a shame, because there may never be another chance to
see it with its closest kin, or them with it. And also because
Vermeer's masterpiece is such a stunning example of the special
viewing that Dutch cityscapes encourage, and reward. The painting's
perspective is designed for viewing from the very far left, though
it's not clear that that's ever been noticed. Seen from there, but
only from there, the long, turreted gatehouse at the right edge of
the scene looks as it's meant to, and as it really sat in life --
sticking out at right angles to the rest of the view, straight out at us.
Vermeer's "View" also rewards standing very close to it, even more
than other such Dutch paintings do. Once the picture completely fills
your sight, without a hint of frame in view, Vermeer's famous light
and air and space wrap all the way around you. Suddenly, you're in a
Vermeer, not looking at one.
Pride of Place: Dutch Cityscapes of the Golden Age runs through May 3
in the West Building of the National Gallery of Art, on the north
side of the Mall at Sixth Street NW. Call 202-737-4215 or visit
<http://www.nga.gov>http://www.nga.gov.
--
YIS
Davitt il Bigollo da Pisa
Erudit de l'Academie de Espee de Atlantia
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